

Paul Samuelson nailed the prediction industry in one sentence in 1966. It is still true. The recession is not the real threat to your portfolio. The threat sits between your ears.
What a UK global tracker actually holds
Diversified by geography on paper, concentrated by valuation style in practice.
Recession, bear market, crash: not the same thing
| Concept | Definition | How often |
|---|---|---|
| Recession | Two quarters of negative GDP | Real, slow, measured in quarters |
| Bear market | Stocks fall 20%+ from peak | Common, often unrelated to GDP |
| Crash | Rapid panic selloff over days | Rare, often a buying opportunity in hindsight |
Half the noise comes from people using three different words to mean three different things.
Key takeaways
The US market looks expensive at the top end, but bearish recession calls have been wrong for years - Paul Samuelson called this out in 1966.
Valuations and the economy are not the same thing. You can think markets are pricey without forecasting a recession.
UK gilts above 5% have ended the "no alternative" era for cash and short-duration bonds, changing how to harden a portfolio.
The biggest risk for most UK savers is not the next recession but their own reaction to it.